Skip to main content

Second Life Gets Ready for Enterprise

Linden Lab’s Second Life might be known as the most free-wheeling of the online virtual worlds—Second Life hosts its own virtual version of Burning Man every year, and is currently embroiled in an copyright infringement lawsuit with makers of in-game sex furniture. But the company has attracted serious interests from businesses and enterprise eyeing the virtual world technology as a way to substantially improve collaboration, training, telepresence, and conferencing within their companies…if only they didn’t have to deal with security and confidentiality issues of hooking up to the main Second Life grid. So at the Enterprise 2.0 conference today, Linden Lab plans to unveil Second Life Enterprise, a beta version of its “Nebraska” project, a new solution that will let corporations and enterprises set up their own private virtual worlds behind their corporate firewalls, separate from the Second Life grid.

665-behind-firewall

“We’ve worked very closely with our enterprise customers to develop a solution that would fit seamlessly within their existing networks while also solving real business challenges,” said Linden Lab CEO Mark Kingdon. “Second Life Enterprise Beta is a perfect complement to our existing work offerings, enabling us to offer a virtual work experience tailored to meet the specific needs of a broad range of organizations.”

The Second Life Enterprise solution runs completely within an organizations’s network, without connecting out to Linden Lab’s service farms or the main Second Life grid. The solution will offer seven pre-packaged regions, including a “four-corners” auditorium for major meetings (it should be able to support hundreds of avatars) and sandboxes for testing. Companies already in Second Life will be able to move material they own on the main grid to Second Life Enterprise; the solution will also ship with a bunch of pre-fab business-appropriate avatars employees can use and customize. Linden Lab says Second Life Enterprise can support up to eight simultaneous regions and up to 800 concurrent users.

To support these walled-off virtual worlds, Linden Lab also plans to introduce a Second Life Work Marketplace, offering enterprise tools and virtual goods enterprise customers can use to enhance and improve their private virtual world experiences. Second Life Work Marketplace should launch in the first half of 2010.

Second Life has attracted the interest of major players like IBM, The Naval Undersea Warfare Center, and Northrup Grumman. However, the Second Life virtual world is currently experiencing something of a crisis involving rampant content theft, regulation of open source-derived third party viewers, and a struggling in-world economy (which is linked to the U.S. dollar). In addition, Linden Lab founder and former CEO Philip Rosedale has just stepped down from day-to-day involvement with Linden Lab. It remains to be seem whether Linden Lab can handle the challenges of running a massive virtual world as well as supply a secure virtual world solution to enterprise customers.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Want a GPU from Best Buy? Get ready for a $200 paywall
Three GPUs from the Nvidia GeForce RTX 30 Series.

Best Buy used to rank highly amongst reliable sources of the best graphics cards, but this could be about to change -- or at the very least, it just got a whole lot more expensive.

The latest drop of Nvidia RTX 30-series graphics cards was locked to only include customers who purchased a membership to the Best Buy Totaltech program. The membership costs $199 per year.

Read more
MacOS Monterey is coming October 25 — here’s how you can get it when ready
The M1-powered Macbook Air, open on a table.

Following the end of the Apple Unleashed event, Apple announced a release date for MacOS Monterey. The new operating system is set to launch on October 25, as the follow-up to 2020's MacOS Big Sur release, and brings several big enhancements centered around productivity.

Coming as a free update for most Macs, the big feature for most people in this release is Universal Control, which lets you use a single mouse and keyboard to control multiple MacOS and iPad devices. The new feature is separate from Sidecar, which lets iPad users leverage the tablet as a second display for your Mac.

Read more
HP’s sleek enterprise Chromebook gets Intel 11th-gen upgrade
A HP Pro c640 Chromebook Enterprise laptop sitting atop a desk.

HP is going after the enterprise market with its latest Chromebook, the HP Pro c640 G2 Chromebook Enterprise. The second-gen Pro c640 Enterprise gets a powerful upgrade to Intel's latest 11th Gen processor, from the prior generation's 10th-Gen CPU.

HP's c640 G2 Chromebook Enterprise is designed for all-day productivity with its stated 12.5 hours of battery life, 14-inch display, and a sleek aluminum unibody design that measures just under 16.5mm thick. This makes it the world's thinnest 14-inch Chromebook, according to the company. And for those who need to extend their work day, Fast Charge technology gets you to a 90% charge in just 90 minutes.

Read more